a: Se - a Se eth aie a oti a EE ae a Che Daily Examiner“ SEPTEMBER 22, 1884. ; some ot the we Backing Down. Ir is only a very short time since the Grits were loudly protesting against the building of the Pacific Raiiway. We al! remember how, in 1872, they declared that the covstruction of such a work would prove the “ruination of our country.” From Cape Breton in the East to Varcouver’s in the West, their lamentations might be heard. They were in opposition then and wantiug to get into power,—aad in they got. No sooner, however, was the responsibility of office placed on the shoulders of their leaders than they wheeled suddenly round and attempted to build the Pacific Railway, not by subsidizing a company, as originally contemplated by their pre deecessers. but as a Government work. The rank aad file of the party followed their leaders as might have been ex pected, and soon Mr. MeKenzie and his obedient followers entered into engage ments, which only a few short months before they had assured the people of Canada would result in rain. Mr. slake, who had told the people of British Columbia from his place in Parliament, that their country was nothing but ‘‘a sea of mountains”; that they need never ex- pect to get the railway; and that if they didu’t like ii they ‘ might go in peace,” was among the first to commit the country to the undertaking as a government work. Our Island grit representatives— Yeo, Mc- Intyre, Davies, Laird and Sincliar— willingly tell into line at the crack of the party's whip, and voted, not only to build the Pacific Railway, but also to con struct, ia advance of the railway a tele- graph line and waggon road across the Rocky Mountains—and the construction of some hundreds of miles of railway ou Vancouver's Island besides. It is not necessary to advert here at length to the unfortunate state of affairs that prevailed under the McKenzie Suffice it to say, that after largely increasing the burdens of the taxpayers, and expeudivg millions of dollars in foolishly attempting to utilize the “water stretches,” the Grits found themselves, at the end of the five years, at sea with their wood aud water rail- way scheme—as with everything else they attempted to do. The intelligent electors of Canada, seeing the breakers on which our sbip of state was fast drifting, brought the Liberal-Conserva- tive party, with the wise and patriotic Sir John at its head, again into power; and at once public confidence was re- stored. But the Grits, though beaten at the polls, were bound to do all they could hy disparaging their country, as they did in 1873, with the view of destroying all prospect of ever completing the Pacitic re mime. Railway. From their places in the House of Commons, they told British capitalists not to risk one cent in the undertaking some of them going so far as to say that they always looked upon the building of that Railway as sure to outweigh the capacity of Canada; one of them, in par- ticular, stating that he didn’t think there was a million of acres of fertile land in the whole ot the Northwest; and that the exorbitant price of $2 an acre, placed upon the land there, would surely turn the tide of emigration to the United States. Further on we find them, true to their political instincts, underrating their country aud denouncing the bargain entered into with the Syndicate. Mr. L. H. Davies, it will be remembered, took the stump, and grew excusingly path- etic over the Syndicate contract. Mr. Davies told his hearers how the present Government was about to overwhelm the country with debt and desolation. After the fashion of the yellow-covered literature of the day, he pictured the Northwest as ‘a quagmire of millions,” ‘“‘a place of dismal swamps and endless frosts,’ and only hoped to. live long enough to see the woole scheme over- turned. Surely the grits—even the most bigotted and benighted of them—must see by this time that they were wrong iu all they said about the building of the Pacific Railway—and the consequent openiog up of the Great Northwest. Mr. McKeonzle, tle ex-premier himself, has lately been over the road, and has had the pleasure of playing hide and go seek amoug the tall oats that he found grow- ing inthe vicinity of Calgary. In a speech at Winvipeg on his way home Mr Mackenzie said :— ‘He might say that the fertility of the soil was an undoubted fact; and that there was a very small percentage indeed, in what had been considered the arid distrcts, that was not eminently capable of cul- tivation- He had particularly noted this in various places that he had supposed from previous reports to be somewhat arid, but which were, to a great extent, now agricultural. He now stated that the entire country, almost, could bo cultivated, and with great advantage.” _ “He had heare before leaving home that in the neighborhood of the great ranches of the west, the land was thoroughly unsuited tc agricultural purposes; but when they Teached Calgary tney ascertained from Scular demonstrations that the finest crop im the Nortwest were growing there. He 84¢ oats in which he was able to hide him ae ake mot Ss. All the grain seemed to be vf t Most 8: \isfact ny: description. On 2? fiel®a man }iad grown ‘pats for six yeark penne the present cro, woul *¥erage OY or (0 bushels per acre.” «ething had struck him so much in passir’® through the great country to the hi a Mm DATE des the debt’: and strength of the il, as the per feet independenc e of the settlers in most districts. He had visited the coal mines of the Sackatchewan, near Mi icine Hat, and had been enabled to see adrous mineral wealth this country contained. The amount of this wealih was perfectly incomprehensible to anyone, The coal-tields were hundreds of miles in extent, and at one place above Edmonton the river passes through a seam of coal, forty feet in thickness. After this, we hope to hear no more from Mr. McKenzie about the superior- ity of Texas and Kansas over Canada as a place for settlement. And we also hope that his political admirers in this Province will follow his example in acknowledging that they bave been ev tirely in error in regard to their esti mate of the Northwest, and that after all bas been said and done, that section of our Dominion is likely to prove a great source of wealth to the older Provinees,—its agricultural ¢ capacities aud mineral wealth being attested to by individuals whom even the most un- believing Grit in the land will, doubtless, readily believe. —_———_—_ « mem eo Editorial Notes. —The remarkably low prices for grain is a matter of great concern to British farmers—who have good crops this year. —The Pacific Railway Company’s exhibit at Edinburgh, known as_ the “Manitoba Farm,” has been awarded a silver medal and been highly recom- mended by the Judges. —The statement of imports into Moncton shows an increase in the last fiscal year of $279,720; and the state- ment of exports an increaso of $35,584, or nearly 100 per cent. s —Fever is very prevalent in Char- lottetown, and the doctors say that bat for the change in the weather we should now have an epidemic among us. The main cause is well kuown; and the law, requiting the use by all of dry earth or ashes, should be enforced. —The Halifax Herald Says:— ‘The presence of Hon. Mr. Solomon in Ottawa brings the question of West Indian annexation into the arena of practical polli- tics. The Dominion government must be held responsible for the manner in which they receive and dea! with the great scheme which Mr. Solomon will now submit for theic consideration. Itis undoubtedly the most important question that ever a colonial government was called on to deal with. The opportunity of acquiring for Canada undisputed control of a market for some $40,000,000 more of her produce, and of acquiring trepical possessions that have for centuries been the admiration and desire of all nations, is such an opportunity as is not often presented to any government.” —The Ottawa Citizen points out that “Grits aud Radicals are ‘kittle catde.’ In Lords--the second Chamber—because it refuses to be merely the registrar of the will of the commons. In Canada their great ground of complaint against the Senate—our second Chamber—is that it does not oppose the will of the Com. mous. The grits are most at home and most happy when most inconsistent. In England they say to the House of Lords : ‘Be subservient to the Commons or we'll agitate for your abolition.’ In Canada they say to the Senate: ‘You are sub- servient, and, therefore, you should be abolished.’ —-Those who fear that the smaller Provinces will be swamped by Ontario with its immense accession of territory, are as likely to be mistaken, as those who rejoice at the accession as a source of wealth and strength to the Province,—if the statement’s of a correspondent of The Week who writes over the nom de plume “Viator,” are true. ‘Viator’ says :— ‘*T have just passed through the territory annexed to Untario, after so much turimoi! and expenditure by the Boundary Award, and the acquisition of which is to form the oceasion of the destined ovation to Mr. Mowat, I thin it inay safely be said that through tie whole length of it, from Rat Portage to Port Arthur, so far as can be seen from the railway, there is neither a single acre of cultivable land nor a single stick of good timber. All is rock and scrub, lake or swamp. We are told that there are minera's beneath the surface, but this is sometimes a polite way of saying that there is nothing above it. Stone fora monument to our conquering hero there may be. Otherwise we seem to have ac- quired nothing but an irreclaimahle and melancholy wilderness.” ———$—$—$—$—$ Our Advertisers. D. R. M. Hooper announces that a public meeting for the purpose of discussing the Scott Act will be held in the Market Hall next Thursday evening. A. McNeill advertises an auction sale of apples, fish, ete., to-morrow, at haif-past ten o'clock. Amy Ann Green aunounces the sale under mortgage cf certain valuable pro- perty. Wm. Dodd, holds a sale of apples and onions at his sales-room to-morrow at two o'clock. H. LeSuer publishes some information for candidates for the Civil Survice. oe The price of bread is eagerly discussed in | England and Ireland, the public being wroth that though wheat never reached 40 shillings the quarter, and is now barely , over 38, the price of bread remains exactly | the same as when the price of wheat was 10 shillings higher. — <> ae General Butler, however hopeless his! chances of securing the presidency are, is! working hard. Within seventeen days he has travelled six thousand miles and de- livered fifty-one addresses in seventeen states. England they are attacking the House of MI ee eS ee A Modern Difficulties Cianrch Guardian. The event of the week (in Halifax) has been the lecture delivered by the Rev. G. W. Hodgson, of Charlottetown,on ‘* Modern Difficulties concerning Prayer.” The town | pulpits have been for some time past been exercised over the subject. An Univer- salist minister here attacked the Chureh of England idea of **Prayer,” and preached a sermon, the ultimate logic of which was that prayer was next to useless. The in- teiest aroused on the subject, aud the an- nouncement that the Rev. Mr. Hodgson would lecture drew together an audience that overcrowded the building; people were obliged to sit on the chancel steps, and many had to go away for want of room. After stating that, so- far as he knew, there was but one difficulty that could be called modern, viz., that advance d knowledge had given men a better and firmer idea of the reign of law in the universe, he then proceeded to develop the main thesis of the subject. He admitted the reign of law to the full—in the material and in the immaterial world. Where the law cannot be recognized it is through our own ignorance, and not want of law. The lecturer claimed that he must postulate a first cause—call it what you like—and this tirst cause must be an intelligent being, else dead matter must be the origin of life. This first cause he called Ged. Tne lec urer nuted many people speak of law in a very vague manner; always wake them define what they mean by law—what it is, and where it comes from—what gives this law. He believed in law because he be- lieved in God. God's dealings with his creatures are by secondary causes, and those causes operated on the life of man, and on the life of everything in the world. God made the tree, but the seed was first planted—trst carried from somewhere. The planting is as much a law as the grow- ing. Asan instance of the wonderful net- work of secondary causes which operate to produce a single act, the lecturer men- tioned that the presence there in that build- ing of any Once person was the result of secondary causes, or a succession of events, the first of which originated centuries ago. For instance, if Columbus had not discover- ed America, perhaps some person in the audience would not be there. These secondary events ended in the determination or will of the person to be present. Among the number of secondary causes, Prayer was one. But some may object to man being able to change God’s purpose by prayer ; then may not prayer change the position of the person to God, and thus, through the secondary causes, bring about the right results ! Thus far could the argu- ment be carried outside revelation, and it was a proposition that no one could deny, unless he was prepared to say that he abso- lutely knew «// the secondary causes, and that among them Prayer had no place. The point was illustrated and supported by eloquent language which a synopsis cannot do justice to. The next point was that every great moral reformer who had left his influence on the world prayed. The young ravens pray, and the parent bird feeds them. The lambs bleat for the mother’s attention. Many things, the lecturer said, are given by the parent to his child without request, but many others are not given un- less asked for, and sometimes a wise parent will not give, however much prayed for. If so with earthly parentage, why not so with “Our Father which art in Heaven.” Plant Food. A correspondent of the Canadian Dairy- man writes : ‘Tt is doubtful if the land of P. E. Island would bear heavy cheese production, ex- cept under most skilful method of produc- tion. The soil is not deep and the heavy export of products in the past has further reduced it. Much use of ‘‘mussel mud” has been made, under the impression that it was afull fertilizer. Confidence in it as such is on the wane. Some who have used it once cannot be induced to try it again. It is claimed by an intelligent breeder here to be only a stimulant, and hurtful, except when used with manure, It would seem to be in part a stimulant, and, so far, of false promise, as stimulants usually are. ‘If it be true that nature has locked up plant food in the soil in a way that, in ordinary course, it can but slowly be availed of, the provision is a safeguard against disaster. When the soluble elements have been withdrawn the soil fails to respond, and the husbandman is taught the neces- sity of putting back what was taken. The reserve of locked-up plant food is then of great value, and can be moderately used to lessen the burden of making up for years of past extravagance. Here it may be advisable to use a_ stimulant’ in moderation, that is, along with the supply of actual plant food in manure. Such use would be admissable, but, asa stiff and effective stimulant used alone, its use must be to discount future prosperity too heavily for intelligent cul- tivators to do. Here, as in every other case in nature, it is unwise to use a stimu- lant to actually rob nature’s kindly—pro- vided reserve. Farmers of P. E. Island will do well to be cautious; and perhaps caution is in order for farmers elsewhere, who buy so-called artificial fertilizers and let go to waste actual barnyard manure.” oo <a eo Social Notes. ea (From Montreal Gossip.) Instead of looking like the mother of a youth of twenty, the Princess of Wales is thonght to look like a young girl. Miss Allan, whois a fine and fearless horsewomer, has lately purchased some very valuahle animals, and as usual when a lady loves hoises they find themselves in clover. A certain handsome, dark-eyed bachelor journalist of this good city persists in re- maining single, just to aggravate the ladies, There are far more than twenty love-sick maidens now languishing for his smiles. A Montreal matron who joined the B. A. A. S., when asked to which Section she had atiached herself, rephed to Section H., Anthropology. ‘‘What does it mean?” asked a meek friend. ‘Oh, its all about ants and insects, you know,” was the scientific reply. A fair scientist, who did a great deal of shopping while in Montreal, declared that she belonged to Section D., and was siwiying Canadian Buy-vlogy! Nun, EPTHM 2 Applés, Fish &c. BY AUCTION, Tuesday, Sepfember 23rd, at 10.30 @ clo: K, £0 bris. No. 1 Gravestcins (choice.) 15 do, Emperors, Red Streaks, &c, 25 do. Flonr. 15 quls. © dfish. A. McNEILI, Auctioneer, Ch’town, Sept. 22, 1584. Apples & Oranges. To-morrow, (Puesday) af 2 O'clock, at my Room, 50 bris. APPLES, 10 do. ORANGES. WILLIAM DODD, Auctione r. h’town, Sept, 22, 1°84. Yo His Worship, the Mayor of Charlottetowa : E, the undersiyned cit*z2ns of Charlotte- \ town, respectfully request that you will be pleased to call a Public Meeting. at which the questions of the continuance or re- peal of the Ganada Temperance Act may be discussed G. Scantlebury, jr., H. Sprague, Lewis W. Goff, Ben. Balderston, Norton Bros. , W. H. Bremner, M. O’Shea, Jos. Knight & Son, Jas. Cameron, David Stewart, John Jury, Henry Davison, W. M. Coffin, D. Farquharson, W. A. Weeks Lemuel Phillips, W. E. Dawson, T. Foley, Geo. W. Miilner, D. M. Melntyre, W. Kennedy, George Carter, Richard Pickard, W. J. Miller, W. L. Wellner, Adam Murray, Thos. W. Dodd, Ben. Rogers, R. M. Barrett, Chas. Ives Morrison, Frederick Perkins, T. J. Harris, James Curtis, D. MclIsaac, Simon W. Crabbe, J. B. Macdonald. In compliance with the above petition 1 hereby calla Public Meeting of the citizens in the Market Hall at 3 o’clock p. m., on Thurs- day, 25th inst. DAVID R, M. HOOPER, Mayor. Sept, 22, '84. Civil Service Eutrance Examinations YHE Preliminary, or Lower Grade examin- ‘I ation, will commence on Tuesday the lith November next, and the Qualifying or Higher Grade, on Weduesday the 12th, Can- didates for the Higher need not pass the Lower Grade examination. The examinations will be h-ld at the places at which they were he!d in May last. Applications for admiseion must be made to the undersigned not later than the (5th October, P, LxSUEUR, Commissioner and Secretary to Board, Ottawa, 12th Sept , 1584, Sept. 22, ’s4. MORTGAGE SALE, TO be sold at Public Auction on Wednesday, the twelith day of November next, A.D., 1884, at the hour of twelve o’clock, noon, in front of the Court House, in Charlotte- town. A*< that tract, picce and parcel of land situate, lying aud weing in Township number seventeen, and bounded and described as follows, :—Commencing at a stake fixed on the north side of a street leading from Central Street, (so called) to the Hinton Road, and on the south-west angle of land formerly in possession of Daniel Green, Esq. ; thence northerly along the western boundary line of said land for a distaice of nineteen chains and seventy-tive links to land now in possession of Robert T. Holman, E-q. ; thence westwardly along the southern boundary line of said last mentioned Jand, a distance of seven chains and ninety-nive links, or tothe said Hinton Road ; thence southwardly along the eastern side of the said Hinton Read a distance of nineteen chains and s«venty-five links; thence eastwardly a distance of eight chains and twenty-eight links to the place of commence- ment, containing by estimation an area of fifteen acres, three rods and ten poles, a little more or less, together with all buildings and improvements the:eon, and appurtenarces thereunto belonging. The ab sve sale is made under and by virtue of a Power of Sale co :taimed in a mortgage dated 5th June, 1875 mads between Charles Green of ‘lownship : umber seventeen, farmer, of the one part, and Amy Ann Green of the same place, of the o‘ her part. For further particn!ars apply at the office of Palmer and MeLeod, Charlottetown. Dated at Charlottetown this 20th Septem- ber, A. D., 1854, AMY ANN GREEN, Mortgagee. Ch’town, Sept. 22, 54—oaw mon FLOUR. FLOUR. 125 bris' CHOICE PATENT, 375 bris. SUPERIOR EXTRA, for prompt delivery at Charlottetown or Summerside 20 bris. No. 1 PiLOT BREAD, 10 bris. THIN FAMILY, HOR SALE BY J. A. CHEV RAN & CO,, Corner Pownal and Water Streets. Ch’ town, Sop 5 “TO LET, HE residence on ‘rince Street at present occupied by Mrs. Arthur Swabey, contain- ing eleven rooms, fitted with grates, chan- deliers, etc., in a good state of repair. Apply to F. S. MOORE. Aug 20—2aw FOR SALE. _ 40,000 First-class Brick in Lots to Snit Purchasers, Wet I WRON & McLEAW. . ’ ‘ vb Sept 20, 8t. Jw Damaged Flour. few barrels Flour, slightly damaged, ter A sale at a bargain. HORACE HASZARD., Ch’town, Sept. 20, ’84—1 w eod, FOR SALE. THXUAT Farm, 3 miles from Charlottetown, consisting of 34 acres, on the North river Road and lately in possession of the Subscriber. Apply to WM. PICKARD, East Royalty. Sept. 20, ‘u4-—eod 1 mo MARKET HALL. —— ae HAZLIE & RYERSON’S Specialty & Comedy Company, Admission 25 ; Reserved Seats 35. ickets on sale at Dodd’s Medical Hall. Ch’town, Sept., 19, '$4—5in For the Benefit of all Concerned. Y AUCTION, Tuesday, Septenber 23rd, J at ll o'clock, on Peake’s Wharf No. 1, THE LIFE BOAT from the wrecked Steamship *-Tunstall.” Dimensions : length of keel, 20 ft, Jin; beam, 6ft. 9in; depth, 2:t. 6.n; extreme length over ali, 22 feet, A. McNELLL, Anctioneer. Ch’town, S. pt. 17-—we fri sat mon. FAT HERRING FUR SALE, ot Good Fat For sale cheap UST received «& quantity Newfoundland Herring. in barrels and half barrels. A. HORNE & CO, Upper Queen St, Ch'town, Sept. 18, *R4. - VALUABLE BUILDING SITES. rg O be sold by Auction, on Tuesday 20th instant, at twelve o'clock ou the premises, all that plot of land on Kent Stieet, tormer site of the North Ameri- can Hotel, h»ving a frontage on Kent Street of forty-two feet, and running back one huv- dred and sixty feet. Sale positive. No reserve. Terms at sale. WILLIAM DODD, Auctioneer. Ch’town, Sept 1], (884. NEW FALL GOODS, selected by Mr. Stewart, -IN THE— ENGLISH MARKETS, just arrivee per S. S, Australia and Pheenician, and NOW OPENING —AT THE— LONDON HOUSE. Sx p’. Ai, 1884. NOW OPENING AT THE Loudon House OUR NEW STOCK OF FELT, FUR AND SILK HATS. GEO. DAVIES & CO. Ch’town, Sept 5. BAZAAR! See ee THE MEMBERS OF JOSEPIPS SOCIETY PURPOSE HOLDING A BAZAAR EARLY IN NOVEMBER NEXT, the proceeds to be devoted to the Extension of the Class Rooms of the st, Joseph's Con- vent. on Pownal Street. Sept. 12, 1884. 5 ST. DVERTISE in the DAILY EXAMINER Rates moderate. ag 1668+. NICE BULOG LOT *g O be sold by Auctionon the premise : S on Monday, 29th inet, at 12 o'clock, 4 plot of land situated on the corner of Upper Qyeen and Bayfield Streets, having a f ont. ave of 52 feet on Queen Street and 1:6 tmg on Baytield Street. A very Ces'ralle built ing tot, ‘erms at Sale. WILLIAM DODD, Auctioneer, “cept. ‘7; 1884. PASTURE LOTS, am instructed by Col, Free|-nd to sell by i Anction on the premises, tn Wednesday, Oct., ist, at 12 o'clock, Five Acre Lots in the Commun of Charlotte. town, fronting on the North River and upper Brighton Road, These Lots being near the city, are very suitable fyr pasture. There ig also aquaniity of 8S aweed thrown up end upon one of them a_ valuable deposit of Porter’e Clay. Terme: 2) pr cent mortg: ge 6 pereu, WILLIAM DODD, Auctioneer, down; balin-e on Chitown, Sep. 17, 1884. QOD UND FOR SUL rg*HE Sutecriber offers for sale his valuable i Farm of 187 acres,-«iluated on the Colville Road, at Colville Station, nine miles from Charlottetown. There are about 36@ acres under Cultivation, the balance covered with a heavy growth of Hard and Soft Wood, It will be sold in a block or in lots to suit urchasers, For further particulars apply to EDMUND HORNE, Winsloe Road, or ALEXANDER HORNE, Charlottetown Ch’town, Sept. 18, ’84—-wky din da ona wk pat d, WANZER is = s Sewing Machines. THESE CELEBRATED MACHINis RECEIVED HIGHEST AWARDS At all the leading Exhibitions of the World. Oniy Gold Medal in Canada, 1883. a. F. WILLIS & CO., Sole and only authorized Agents for P. E, L jy30 FOR SALE. i. @. OWEN, Ch’towr, Aug. 'S— mo we fr VANES, LOST, PRO ede, W's '2D—Two rooms unfurnished near cet.treof eisy with board for two (man and wife.) Address, stating torms and loea- ioe, 2..7., F. 0. ban, {lw \ 7 ANTED -A girl to do general house work in a family of two. Inquire ag the ExaMINER OFFIcr, (s* 29 W LET-—The Double Dwelling House oa Prinee Street at present occupied by Mrs, ohn Dorsey and Mrs. LePage, each contrin- ing eight roome, Apply on the premieces. jse 22 _ — ee en ED FFNHE Gentleman who took the keys of St. James’ Church from the janitor’s honse will please return them immediately as they are wanted. A. Kenuedy, {se 19 \ ANTED to purchases a second-hand double baneled shotgyon, Apply at ihis office, [se 18 3in \ ANTED A girl for genere! housework: ' Apply to A. Clark, Oakland House King Street, {se 18 4in aUINE ARTS—Miss A. Alley will re-open her classes in Fine Arts on Wednesday the 24th September, inst The course of study is based on the requirements of the pupil, and inclades Drawing from Casts and Swill Life, Satin Painting and painting in Oils and Water Colors, ete. Instructions also given in Repousse Work. [Se 18, 6in Y OOD MILCH COW for sale, Apply to R. C. Goff at Boot and Shoe Factory. (eep 17. — W ANTED IMMEDIATELY—A COOK. Reference required. Apply at Tue EXAMINER Office, {sepld etn LINE of McCormick’s celebrated BISCUITS AND CONFECTIONERY, [sepl03m ——aer at R. K. Bracr’s JOR SALE -- A New Schooner cf about 15 tons. Apply at this office. [sep 8, 4 ccttmmassum_ A CLERK with some experience in a Gro- LA cory Store will tind employment by addressing P, O. Box 51. {sepl \ ANTED—A COOK. Apply to Mrs. DeBlois, Devonport Cottage, ‘ harlotte- {aug28 ad town Royalty. \ ) E will give exclusive sale at and pear hs ‘ntire Wheat Charlottetown, of our Entire ¥ Mlour, to a dealer who will push it. Cover by patent. Kasilv sold. We guarantee 1 lbs. more bread to the barrel than any other iiour. —~FRANKLIN Mi‘ is Co , 38 Clark Street, Chicayo, Ili. auge {{RL WANTED immediately, to do gee JK erai housework in a small ae. fille wages. Apply to Mrs John A, Moore, boreuch Square. joug?! aaa “yO LET. - Shop and Tenement on Upper Queea Stree at present occupl y Mrs McLean. Apply to J. McGiLt. aug2 — pat. fs